EU Funding · NGOs and public bodies · Malta

EU funding for ngos and public bodies in Malta

Malta coverage is being rebuilt — we are evaluating replacement feeds for Malta Enterprise and e-PPS.

Eligible for LIFE, Interreg, ERDF, and mission-specific Horizon Europe calls. Typically need to demonstrate public benefit, territorial impact, or policy alignment.

Part of our eu funding for ngos and non-profits guide and the complete EU funding guide.

Malta funding focus areas

Typical priorities across Malta national and regional programmes.

  • SME incentives
  • Innovation support
  • Public procurement

Malta sources we monitor

    EU programmes relevant to ngos and public bodies in Malta

    These EU programmes are accessible to Malta-based organisations either directly or via consortium partners.

    • LIFE Programme

      2021–2027

      €5.4 billion

      The EU instrument for environment and climate action. Funds nature conservation, circular economy, climate change mitigation, and clean energy transition projects.

    • Interreg (European Territorial Cooperation)

      2021–2027

      €8.05 billion

      Funds cross-border, transnational, and interregional cooperation projects. Ideal for organisations working across multiple EU countries on shared challenges.

    • European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)

      2021–2027

      €226 billion (combined Cohesion)

      Invests in infrastructure, innovation, and economic development at regional level. Managed nationally but funded by the EU. Targets less-developed regions.

    • Horizon Europe

      2021–2027

      €95.5 billion

      The largest EU research and innovation programme. Funds collaborative R&D, breakthrough innovation, and research infrastructure across all scientific disciplines.

    How to apply

    The end-to-end EU funding process — same shape whether you apply from Malta or elsewhere.

    1. 1

      Find open calls that match your profile

      Search by country, sector, applicant type, and deadline. EU funding is published across dozens of portals, so consolidation saves significant time.

    2. 2

      Check eligibility before investing effort

      Review applicant mode (single vs consortium), entity type requirements, geographic restrictions, and co-financing obligations. Disqualify early to protect team bandwidth.

    3. 3

      Build your consortium if required

      Many Horizon Europe calls require partners from multiple EU countries. Identify complementary organisations early — consortium formation often takes longer than proposal writing.

    4. 4

      Write and submit your proposal

      Follow the call documentation precisely. Most EU proposals require a work plan, budget breakdown, impact statement, and consortium description. Submit via the Funding & Tenders Portal.

    5. 5

      Evaluation and grant agreement

      Proposals are evaluated by independent experts against published criteria. Successful applicants negotiate a grant agreement that defines deliverables, reporting, and payment schedule.

    Malta funding FAQs

    How much EU funding is available?

    The EU allocates hundreds of billions of euros across its 2021–2027 budget cycle. Horizon Europe alone provides €95.5 billion for research and innovation. National agencies distribute additional co-funding, and structural funds like ERDF support regional development.

    Do I need to be based in the EU to apply?

    Most EU funding requires at least one partner established in an EU or EEA member state. Some programmes also allow participation from associated countries (like the UK and Switzerland under specific agreements). National co-funding typically requires a local entity.

    How long does the EU funding process take?

    From call publication to grant agreement, expect 6–12 months. Proposal preparation takes 4–8 weeks for most calls. Evaluation takes 3–5 months. Grant agreement negotiation adds another 1–3 months before funding arrives.

    What is co-financing and how does it work?

    Most EU grants do not cover 100% of project costs. Co-financing means your organisation contributes a percentage (typically 25–50%) through own funds, in-kind contributions, or other revenue. The exact rate depends on the programme and your entity type.

    What is the difference between EU grants and EU tenders?

    Grants fund your project — you propose what to do and the EU co-finances it. Tenders are procurement contracts — the EU defines what it needs and you bid to deliver it. Grants support innovation and research; tenders purchase specific services or products.

    Where are EU funding calls published?

    EU-level calls appear on the Funding & Tenders Portal (ec.europa.eu). Tenders are published on TED (Tenders Electronic Daily). National co-funding is published on each country's innovation agency portal. EU Fund Portal monitors 40+ of these sources in one place.

    Who can apply for Malta grants?

    Most Malta programmes target SMEs, startups, research bodies, and consortium-led projects. Eligibility varies by call, so we surface the most common patterns and link to the official source for confirmation.

    Do I need to be based in Malta?

    Some calls require a local entity, but many EU and cross-border programmes allow international partners. We highlight country and consortium requirements on each listing so you can decide quickly.

    How often is Malta data refreshed?

    We monitor the Malta sources throughout the day and surface new or updated calls in your daily alert workflow. You can also browse live results at any time.

    Start screening Malta calls for ngos and public bodies

    One workflow covering EU-level programmes and Malta national sources.